This masterful Disney animation, Disney's second full-length
animated film (following Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937)),
was about Geppetto, an old Tuscany wood-carver who wished that his
hand-made wooden puppet named Pinocchio would turn into a real boy.
Shortly later, a Blue Fairy (voice of Evelyn Venable) promised that
if Pinocchio was brave, told the truth, and was unselfish, the wish
would come true.

The film won two Academy Awards: Best Original Music
Score, and Best Original Song. The film was most noted for its award-winning
song When You Wish Upon a Star (pictured), sung by small Jiminy
Cricket (voice of Cliff Edwards) during the opening credits.

There were many other reknowned musical scenes:

Jiminy Cricket taught Pinocchio to whistle and
then sang the advisory Give a Little Whistle (pictured twice)
to become Pinocchio's conscience: "...Take the strait and
narrow path / And if you start to slide / Give a little whistle,
give a little whistle / And always let your conscience be your
guide"

Pinocchio was led astray by wily Honest John (the
Fox) Worthington Foulfellow and his mute feline sidekick Gideon the
Cat during the delightful song Hi-Diddle-Dee-Dee (An Actor's Life
for Me) (pictured): "Hi-diddle-dee-dee An actor's life for
me A high silk hat and a silver cane A watch of gold with a diamond
chain Hi-diddle-dee-day An actor's life is gay It's great to be a
celebrity An actor's life for me!....Hi-diddle-dee-dum An actor's
life is fun...Hi-diddle-dee-dee An actor's life for me A wax mustache
and a beaver coat A pony cart and a billy goat Hi-diddle-dee-dum
An actor's life is fun You wear your hair in a pompadour You ride
around in a coach and four You stop and buy out a candy store An
actor's life for me!"

the human-like puppet Pinocchio (voice of Dickie Jones)
sang I've Got No Strings (pictured) when performing for Italian
marionette-maker Stromboli's (voice of Charles Judels) puppet show: "I've
got no strings To hold me down To make me fret, or make me frown
I had strings But now I'm free There are no strings on me Hi-ho the
me-ri-o That's the only way to be I want the world to know Nothing
ever worries me..."

The plot was set in 1830s West Indies,
in the village of Calvados. It was about notorious
'pirate' or 'sea wolf' Mack the Black (or Macoco) - a strolling,
hammy philandering, traveling troubadour-actor named Serafin (Gene
Kelly) who was posing as "Mack the Black" (played as swashbuckling
Douglas Fairbanks or Errol Flynn with a mustache and black hair).

Serafin fooled naive and
moony Caribbean girl Manuela Alva (Judy Garland) into falling in
love with him (and believing he was the romantic buccaneer) rather
than marrying duplicitous, fat mayor Don Pedro (Walter Slezak) -
the real Macoco who had become old and obese.

It was the only Garland MGM
film that lost money, at a time when Garland (married to director Minnelli)
was personally struggling with drug addiction.

The most noted musical numbers were:

Kelly's splendid
rumba-rhythmed opening debonair number Nina (pictured) in
which he danced with and attempted to seduce various senioritas in
the town of Port Sebastian

Garland's Mack the Black ballet (pictured),
staged as a passionate hypnotic dream about her love for the "pirate"
Mack the Black; she began by repeating the chant: "Underneath this
prim exterior, there are depths of emotion, romantic longings"
before singing about the famed pirate-lover: ("There's a pirate
known to fame, Black Macoco was the pirate's name, In his day the
tops was he, Round the Caribbean or Caribbean Sea....")

Garland's love ode to Serafin: You Can Do No
Wrong (pictured)

Garland's lilting profession of love with Love
Of My Life (pictured)

the famous Cole Porter tune Be a Clown (pictured
twice) reprised in the final number between Kelly and Garland -
but earlier seen in a song-and-dance number by Kelly in green and
yellow clown makeup when he acrobatically danced with the Nicholas
Brothers duo

Pocahontas (1995)

Best
Original Song: Colors of the Wind

This under-rated Disney animated feature film was
the studio's first to highlight an actual historical figure.

It offered up Alan Menken (music) / Stephen Schwartz
(lyrics) musical production numbers, and won two Academy Awards for
Best Original Song (Colors of the Wind) and Best Original
Musical Score (Menken and Schwartz also).

the dramatic, show-stopping,
imaginative and poignant Oscar-winning number Colors of the Wind
(pictured twice) was sung by Pocahontas (voice of Irene Bedard,
performed by Vanessa Williams and also by Judy Kuhn) to Captain John
Smith (voice of Mel Gibson) to show him the ways of her naturalistic
world in the forest: ("...Have
you ever heard the wolf cry to the blue corn moon Or asked the grinning
bobcat why he grinned? Can you sing with all the voices of the mountain?
Can you paint with all the colors of the wind?")

Just Around the Riverbend (pictured), also
by Pocahontas (singing voice of Broadway star Judy Kuhn) was performed
as she canoed down the river with her friends Meeko the raccoon
and hummingbird Flit: ("...What's around the river bend Waiting
just around the river bend. I look once more just around the river
bend. Beyond the shore where the gulls fly free Don't know what
for What I dream the day might send Just around the river bend
For me, coming for me")

Poor Little Rich Girl (1936)

Fox Studios capitalized on its greatest moneymaker
in the 30s --- young Shirley Temple, and this display piece was no
different than many other Temple "moppet" films (with weak plotlines
and mostly ridiculous circumstances), highlighted by fantastic dance
and singing scenes.

This Fox film by director Irving Cummings was loosely
based on the 1917 silent feature of the same name (with Mary Pickford),
with music and lyrics by Mack Gordon and Harry Revel.

Shirley starred
as neglected child Barbara Barry of a wealthy, strict and widowed
father (a soap-tycoon). When alone and stranded, she became friends
with two unemployed vaudeville entertainers: Jimmy Dolan (Jack Haley)
(Shirley called him "Pudd'nhead") and his wife Jerry
Dolan (Alice Faye), who took her on as their "poor little rich
girl"
daughter. They were a song-and-dance team known as Dolan and Dolan.

As a budding radio star, Shirley had the opportunity
to perform in a number of musical scenes:

Shirley's charming and cute solo number Oh,
My Goodness (pictured)
(sung to her dolls at bedtime): "...I wanna make mud pies,
In fact I'd like to be a mess, I wanna make mud pies, I know that
I'd find happiness. If I got jam on my fingers, Chocolate on my
face and molasses all over my dress. You're the only friends I've
ever had. But one minute you're good and the very next minute you're
bad! At times I ought to hate you. You make me feel so blue. But
honest I can't hate you. When you smile at me the way you do, Oh,
my goodness!"

the comical You Gotta Eat Your Spinach, Baby (pictured),
first performed by Faye and Haley at a microphone, and interrupted
by Shirley, who asked: "Pardon me, did I hear you say Spinach?";
she then took the stage to speak and sing: "I represent all
the kids of the nation who sent me to see you about it. I bring
the message from the kids of the nation to tell you we can do without
it. Kindly listen to me. I'm not alone in my plea. There are dozens
and dozens and dozens of us Nephews and nieces and cousins of us.
They want me to say -- Hallelujah! Hallelujah! No spinach, take
away that awful greenery. No spinach, give us lots of jelly beanery.
We positively refuse to budge. We'd like lollipops and we like
fudge. But no spinach, Hosanna!..."

Shirley also performed an intricate military tap
routine in uniform in the song-and-dance finale I Love a Military
Man (pictured), a tacked-on sequence,
with both Faye and Haley

Porgy and Bess (1959)

#
52 "Summertime"

This Gershwin musical (adapted from the 1934 opera)
from Columbia Pictures was directed by Otto Preminger. It was produced
by independent Hollywood producer Samuel Goldwyn. Copies of the film
have been very hard to locate and it has been rarely seen.

It was an Academy Award winner (its sole win) for Best
Musical Score (Andre Previn and Ken Darby). Its other three nominations
were: Best Sound, Best Costume Design, and Best Cinematography.

An adaptation of the original
1935 Broadway play, it featured an African-American
cast, mostly non-singers who were dubbed by others:

Summertime, the trademark
song, performed by Diahann Carroll in the opening

It Ain't Necessarily So, a rendition by Sammy
Davis Jr.

The Poseidon Adventure (1972)

Best
Original Song: The Morning After

The "Master
of Disaster" producer Irwin Allen's quintessential,
all-star ensemble cast/disaster film epic was about the capsized SS
Poseidon on
New Year's Eve when a tidal wave (caused by a submarine-induced earthquake)
flipped the passenger ship upside down. It was followed by a lesser
sequel Beyond The Poseidon Adventure (1979) and a critically-panned
remake Poseidon
(2006) 34 years later, directed by Wolfgang Petersen.

The Ronald Neame-directed film received eight
nominations and one win - Best Original Song for The
Morning After (aka The Song from The Poseidon Adventure), plus a
Special Achievement Award (non-competitive) for Visual Effects! One
of its non-winning nominations was for Best Original Music Dramatic
Score (by up-and-coming composer John Williams).

Although most people recognize the Maureen McGovern version
of The Morning After, she did not sing it in the movie (but
did release a recording of the song after the film was released). The
character of Nonnie Parry (Carol Lynley, dubbed by Renee Armand), performing
in an on-stage band during a New Year's party rehearsal session onboard
(pictured thrice), and then during the actual party (pictured), sang
in the song in the film.

Postcards From the Edge (1990)

This Mike Nichols' film from
Columbia Pictures was an adaptation of actress Carrie Fisher's own
1987 semi-autobiographical novel of the same name, loosely based
upon her relationship with her mother Debbie Reynolds (who married
Eddie Fisher).

Oscar-nominated Meryl Streep starred as cocaine-addicted
film actress/daughter Suzanne Vale, whose life was chronicled in postcards,
conversations and journal writings. Susanne's heavy-drinking, self-interested
star mother, Doris Mann, was portrayed
by Shirley MacLaine. There were a few great musical performances:

Suzanne's own reluctant and sheepish rendition of
Ray Charles' tune You
Don't Know Me (pictured), at the encouragement and request
of her mother Doris ("Sing one of your old numbers from my act...one
number for your old mother"), to celebrate Suzanne's discharge
from a rehab center

Doris' sexily-exuberant,
cabaret-style performance of the Stephen Sondheim song I'm Still
Here (pictured)

Suzanne's rousing stage performance of the Oscar-nominated
country-western song I'm Checking Out (pictured) (written
by Shel Silverstein, with backup provided by the Blue Rodeo band)
before the end credits: ("Pull back them dark and dusty drapes,
let in some light. Here bellboy come get my trunk, cause I'm leavin'
here tonight. And I've packed my bags, and I've paid my bill, and
I'm turnin' in my key. And if those sad souls down in the lobby
ask for me. Just tell 'em I'm checking out of this heartbreak hotel...")

The Prince of Egypt (1998)

Best
Original Song: When You Believe

DreamWorks Pictures' dramatic animated recreation of
the Biblical epic of Moses (from the Book of Exodus) was the studio's
first traditionally animated film.

It featured songs written by Stephen
Schwartz and a score composed by Hans Zimmer. Its two Academy Award nominations
were:

Best Original Musical Score

Best Original Song (win): When You Believe

During the film, the song (pictured thrice) was performed
by Sally Dworsky (singing voice of Miriam) and Michelle Pfeiffer (as
Tzipporah), and a Boys Choir:

Many nights we prayed With no proof anyone could hear.
In our hearts a hopeful song We barely understood. Now we are
not afraid Although we know there's much to fear. We were moving
mountains Long before we knew we could. There can be miracles
When you believe Though hope is frail, It's hard to kill. Who knows
what miracles You can achieve When you believe somehow you will You
will when you believe...

Popular
single (and album) versions of the winning song were performed by both
Whitney Houston and Mariah Carey, heard during the end credits (pictured).

Together, they concocted
an illegal 'sure-fire' scheme to make a million dollars from
investors by producing the worst, most tasteless play ever made
- a perverted musical romp offensively named Springtime
For Hitler. Their plan backfired when the flop was actually
a surprise hit.

The remake The Producers (2005) adapted
the award-winning Broadway show musical of 2001 (with 12 Tony Awards,
breaking the record held for 37 years by Hello
Dolly! which had won 10), starring
stage performers Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick in the roles made
famous by Zero Mostel and Gene Wilder.

It was highlighted by:

the deliberately distasteful fictional musical Springtime
for Hitler (pictured often), a major production number performed
by a goose-stepping, black-booted Nazi chorus (of males and high-kicking
females) that sang and danced with the lyrics: "Don't
be stupid, be a smarty, Come and join the Nazi party!" - the
sequence was filmed as a parody of the Busby Berkeley style, with
a revolving swastika formation seen from overhead

Director Quentin Tarantino's Oscar-winning independent
film (Best Original Screenplay), his second feature film, was a stylish,
immensely-popular, violent, off-beat, modern B-movie cult classic.

One of its highlights was:

a famous dance scene at the Jack
Rabbit Slims restaurant (with a 50's retro atmosphere) in which mob
strongman Vincent Vega (John Travolta) danced with the mob boss'
moll Mia Wallace (Uma Thurman) - they entered the Twist dance contest
in which they danced to Chuck Berry's You Never Can Tell,
as Vincent attempted to recreate the Batusi (made famous by Adam
West in the campy mid-1960's television show Batman), by making
a horizontal V-sign with his index and middle fingers of both hands,
and drawing them across in front of his eyes, one hand at a time,
with the eyes roughly between the fingers

Purple Rain (1984)

This was an electrifying, highly-profitable semi-autobiographical
rock musical drama/concert film.

It won the Academy Award for Best
Original Song Score (by Prince).

It starred pop singer Prince as The Kid (in his acting
debut), who performed classic rock songs in the soundtrack (concert-style),
such as: